The Fractal Design Node 804 Is An Awesome Case For Your DIY Home Server

If you have a lot of data -- photos, movies, backups, or other files -- a home server is a great way to keep them all in one place for use throughout your house. The Fractal Design Node 804 is my choice for a good-looking, functional PC case for a DIY home server.

The problem is, most PC cases are either big traditional towers, which are an eyesore, or they're small with no room for hard drives. If you're just building a small server, that's fine, but over time, you may find that you want room for expansion (my home server is up to five hard drives now).

That's where the Node 804 comes in: it's a microATX "cube style" case split into two sections. On the left side, you have your motherboard and other components, with room for two hard drives. On the right side, you have your power supply, cables, and two racks of up to eight hard drives, so you can expand to your heart's content. And, while it isn't exactly "small", its cube-style shape makes it easy to fit in an entertainment center (like mine, pictured below on the right) or a closet somewhere. And while $145-160 may seem expensive, it's actually very decently priced for the quality -- and much cheaper than comparable server cases with hot-swap bays or a dedicated NAS like a Synology.

Of course, you get what you pay for in that sense -- swapping out hard drives isn't as easy as dedicated server cases, and it's bigger than a Synology would be. But as long as you have the room for it (and the patience to open it up when you add new drives), it works great.

If you can live with fewer drive bays, the Lian Li PC-Q08B is a good, smaller option that costs about the same -- but it only takes Mini-ITX, so make sure your motherboard has enough SATA slots for those drives.

There are a lot of decent cases on the market, but the Fractal Design Node 804 is what I use for my home server, and I love it. You can grab it at Computer Alliance or PC Case Gear.

Most servers (or NAS) stack drives like slices of bread, in a loaf Look at the Lian Li mentioned in this article for an example. The Fractal 804 seems to stack two loaves, side by side.

Business servers use the "pizza box" layout: a few drives side by side at the front, and so thin the server motherboard goes BEHIND the drives, making a thin (but DEEP) box.

Personally, I'd be happy with 2 or 3 drives high by 2 drives wide: like the Fractal 804 if it was placed on a diet. Should make a box about the same size as that amp in the photo. Finding such a case is proving quite difficult.

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